in the womb room

(Mattie Furphy House)

It was very very dark
There was a tiny crack
I couldn’t tell the time
I heard the trains start
I woke wishing it was morning
I slept in the windowless room
Having many thoughts I lay awake
I heard the trains and traffic start
At 6am it was bright for three seconds
I woke thinking it must be daylight by now
It was city light on the other side of the door
I slept in the windowless room, the womb room
Having many thoughts I lay awake for at least an hour
There was a tiny crack of light under the door to the bathroom
I slept in the windowless room, the womb room, the warm room
In the early light in the kitchen a ghost from the cellar rattled about
I couldn’t tell the time by the quality of the light because there was none
To exclude draughts I had put rolled towels blocking the gap under each door
At 6am it was bright for three seconds as I used my torch to look at my watch
When finally I went to the bathroom it was ocean cold on the other side of the door
In the early light in the kitchen a mouse rattled about and ate the expensive biscuits
When finally I went to the bathroom it was city light cold on the bookless side of the door
To exclude draughts I had put rolled towels blocking the gap under each door but the one to the bathroom
If there’s a ghost it’s in the womb room with its empty coat-cupboard not the cellar with its paint-tins

To the sunshine room

At Mattie Furphy House
the writer-in-residence,
having goodbyed the workshop poets
and their unfinished pieces,

At Mattie Furphy House
the writer-in-residence,
having opened
most of the windows,

At Mattie Furphy House
the writer-in-residence,
having arranged
the furniture and books,
knowing they’ll be moved
by other visitors
but pleased with the feel
of it anyway,

At Mattie Furphy House
the writer-in-residence,
having made a coffee
and while it brewed
emptied the water
of Sunday’s book launch
from the squat white urn
because it’s bad for urns
to be left like that, all
wet and pregnant,

At Mattie Furphy House
the writer-in-residence,
having carried her laptop
to the sunshine room,
plugged in
and powered up,

brings her cup
to the round table,
moves her fingers
into the light,
selects the open-source
notebook app,
and enters
the date,
time
and location.